609 research outputs found
Energy and time as conjugate dynamical variables
The energy and time variables of the elementary classical dynamical systems
are described geometrically, as canonically conjugate coordinates of an
extended phase-space. It is shown that the Galilei action of the inertial
equivalence group on this space is canonical, but not Hamiltonian equivariant.
Although it has no effect at classical level, the lack of equivariance makes
the Galilei action inconsistent with the canonical quantization. A Hamiltonian
equivariant action can be obtained by assuming that the inertial parameter in
the extended phase-space is quasi-isotropic. This condition leads naturally to
the Lorentz transformations between moving frames as a particular case of
symplectic transformations. The limit speed appears as a constant factor
relating the two additional canonical coordinates to the energy and time. Its
value is identified with the speed of light by using the relationship between
the electromagnetic potentials and the symplectic form of the extended
phase-space.Comment: Replaced to write Eqs. (34), (35) in the general for
Heating-Assisted Atom Transfer in the Scanning Tunneling Microscope
The effects of a voltage pulse on the localization probability for a Xe atom
prepared in a pure state localized on the STM surface at 0 temperature is
investigated by numerically integrating the time-dependent Schroedinger
equation. In these calculations the environmental interactions are neglected,
and voltage pulses of 20 and 7 ns with symmetric triangular and trapezoidal
shapes are considered. The atom dynamics at an environmental temperature of 4 K
is studied in the frame of a stochastic, non-linear Liouville equation for the
density operator. It is shown that the irreversible transfer from surface to
tip may be explained by thermal decoherence rather than by the driving force
acting during the application of the voltage pulse.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, 4 postscript figure
- …